0 0 9 -~ -u w w V V 0 -V 8B - The Michigan Daily - Faceoff 2002 - Thursday, October 10, 2002 The Michigan Daily - Faceoff 200 DIFFERENT HATS, SAME TRICK or Eric Nystrom, hearing his name called in the 2002 NHL Entry Draft last June was the biggest thrill of his young career. Jason Ryznar's first response was relief. He sat in Toronto's Air Canada Center through two full rounds before being handed a pro jersey with his name on the back., And Dwight Helninen? He was on vacation. He checked the Internet periodically, and said it was "pretty neat" to see that he'd been picked. Not exact- ly unfettered excitement. Then again, you should expect varied reactions from the three Michigan sophomores. They have dif- ferent backgrounds, personalities and styles of play. But they all share one thing: a crucial role in Michigan's success. Best friends since their junior hockey days - when they were members of the U. S. National Team Development Program - the three Wolverines click on the ice and are together all the time off the ice. Nystrom and Ryznar are roommates, and Helminen often joins them to watch television or just hang out. But their on-ice intensity doesn't just melt away once they leave the rink. "We compete in everything," Ryznar said. "School, on the ice, off the ice. We're pretty com- petitive kids and I think that carries over all the time. Me and Eric get in little tussles sometimes off ice, little fights." Ryznar, who said living with Nystrom is "quite the experience," added that most of their fights are over the remote, and in the end they both lose. Helminen usually takes control of the television. Program preferences are just the beginning of the differences between the three. "Ryznar's from Alaska, I'm from New York - the city-boy,"Nystrom said. "Ryz is a farm-boy, and Dwight's from the big family in Michigan." Ryznar wasn't so sure about that description. "Farm-boy?" he laughed incredulously. "I don't know if I'd call myself a farm-boy, but I guess com- pared to Eric, I would be because he's sort of a city- boy. Kind of preppy, kind of a mama's boy, I guess. You can definitely tell that he's from New York. The way he dresses, the way he acts. He's kind of prissy." Nystrom, who's from Syosset, N.Y., takes that kind of verbal abuse from both Helminen and Ryznar. But as the most talkative of the group, he gives it right back. And Nystrom's "farm-boy" comment probably didn't surprise Ryznar much. He's used to miscon- ceptions about his background and gets all kinds of reactions when he tells people he grew up in Anchorage. "I actually get the question, 'Do you live in an igloo?' or 'Do you mush to school?"' he said, adding that people would be surprised to know that his home town is not snowy and cold year-round. The third member of the trio is neither a "city- boy" nor a "farm-boy" and unlike the other two, Helminen stayed close to home (Brighton) when he chose Michigan. Helminen described himself as an outdoorsman who loves fishing and hunting - interests passed on by his grandfather. He is also the quiet one of the three. "I'm kind of laid back, easy going, a more relaxed type," he said. The three friends are also three different types of hockey players. Nystrom, who describes himself as "a rah-rah guy" that likes to get guys pumped in the lockerroom, racked up 18 goals and 13 assists while playing on Michigan's first line last season. The New Yorker was the top rookie point-scorer on the team, and that scoring touch is one reason why the Calgary Flames made him a first-round draft pick. As the 10th overall selection, the skilled for- ward may get an opportunity to sign with an NHL team before he finishes school. Nystrom doesn't rule out the possibility of turning pro early, but he said timing is critical. "As of right now, I still have so much to learn, and I'm nowhere even near the NHL level, he said, adding that he does not want to leave school only to end up in the minors. "I want to be able to step out of college and step right into a role on an NHL team." Helminen, for one, hopes Nystrom will stick around. He enjoys playing with his occasional linemate. "You go out there, and you know he'll be in the corner with you," Helminen said. "He's one of the hardest workers on the team. It's always fun playing with someone who's going to work hard and (who's) not going to back down out there." Nystrom takes pride in his work ethic, and spent this summer trying to improve his skating and increase his speed. Skating is Helminen's specialty. At 5-foot-10 and 191 pounds, the soft-spoken southpaw is smaller than Nystrom and Ryznar, but he makes up for it with his speed. An eighth-round draft pick by the Edmonton Oilers, he scored 18 points in 40 games last season, and was only partly satisfied. "I thought maybe I'd have a more productive year," he said. "This year I definitely have to pick it up and be one of the leaders on this team" The 6-foot-4 Ryznar towers over Helminen, but their leadership styles are similar. Like Helminen, Ryznar doesn't say much in the dressing room, but that doesn't mean he's not effective. "He leads by just the way he works in the corners on the ice," Nystrom said. "His physical play, that's the way he leads." The bruiser netted 16 goals in his freshman sea- son, while using his size to drill opposing players. The New Jersey Devils selected Ryznar in the third round of this summer's draft. The three forwards have a certain synergy on the ice, and Nystrom said part of that could be because they're such good friends. "It's crazy how that works," he said. "Chemistry off the ice leads to chemistry on the ice. There are some guys that you just click with. And when you're around them all the time you seem to have a sixth sense of what they're doing." Another reason they play well together may be that they were teammates long before they came to Michigan. All three played on US-NTDP teams from 1999-2001. They traveled all over America and Europe, facing some of the best young players in the world. With most of the team living away from home, Nystrom said that all 22 players relied on each other: "We were all kind of like brothers," he said. Ihree of the brothers were particularly close, and that influenced their decision of where to play col- lege hockey. Helminen and Nystrom chose Michigan first, and they convinced Ryznar to join them in Ann Arbor. All three players had an immediate impact as freshmen. While Nystrom teamed up with former winger Mike Cammalleri and current senior captain Jed Ortmeyer to power Michigan's offense, Rzynar's physical presence and Helminen's grittiness were also vital to the Wolverines' Frozen Four run. But that was last year. With high-scoring defenseman Mike Komisarek and leading goal- scorer Cammalleri leaving early for the NHL, these sophomores know this is a new team, and they have new roles. "Last year we had a big impact on the team, but this year we have to have a bigger impact,"Nystrom said. "People are going to be looking at us to step up and lead." "I think there's definitely added pressure from last year," Ryznar said. "You're a sophomore, you're not an inexperienced freshman anymore. Every day you have to get better, and you really have to show that you improved from last year." Helminen added that the team doesn't talk about the departures of Cammalleri, Komisarek and goal- tender Josh Blackburn much, but everyone is well aware of the holes they left behind. And despite the off-season losses, the three sophomores like the makeup of the 2002-03 Wolverines. "I don't think we're going to have a lot of superstars, but every game we're going to give it our all," Ryznar said. "We'll compete every shift in every game." Nystrom set the tone at a team gathering before the season started. "It's not about who's missing; it's about who's here," Nystrom told the Wolverines. "And it's those guys who are going to win the games, not the guys who are gone. They're gone, they're history, they're ghosts now" The city boy, the suburbanite and the kid from Alaska are all still here, and there is nowhere else they'd rather be. A l Montoya is not your average 17-year-old. LAMost 1 7-year-olds haven't taken mail corre- spondence courses in addition to a normal aca- demic load to arrive at college a year early. Most 17-year-olds haven't left their families when they were 15 to move to Texas to play hockey with guys five years older. Most 17-year-olds aren't preparing to have 6,800 screaming fans watch their every move each weekend as he continues a legacy left by Steve Shields, Marty Turco and Josh Blackburn. When Montoya takes the net against Niagara, he will become the fifth straight goalie to start as a freshman at Michigan and the youngest of those five. But to Al Montoya, this is nothing new. When Montoya was seven and playing in a local league in Glenview, Ill., a suburb just north of Chica- go, his coach pulled him out of the league and put him on the travel team. "When I asked (the coach) 'Why are you doing this?' he said, 'Leave him alone, he's OK where he's at,"' said Dr. Irene Silva, Al's mother. As Montoya was shot at 50 to 60 times a contest, his squad wasn't given much of a chance according to Silva. However, with Montoya in net, the team made it to the league finals. When Al was 11, he was invited onto a team of 12- year-old Chicago-area travel players to represent the United States for a one-week tournament in Sweden. He was invited by the father of current Michigan freshman Danny Richmond and former Michigan player Steve Richmond. But throughout all this, Montoya was never really sure that he wanted hockey to be his life. After playing AAA hockey for three years in middle school, Al became exhausted from all the weekend trips around the Midwest and never really being able to hang out with his friends from school. He then played football at nearby Loyola Academy - where his brother starred for four years as a lineman before playing at the Naval Academy, and played on the varsity hockey team. While in net he helped his team of 17- and 18- year-olds to the state semifinals. But the competitive- ness wasn't enough for him. "When I went to Loyola Academy, I was like, 'Maybe I want to take it down a level. Play football, see what I wanted to do."' Montoya said. "After I played that year, I was like, 'Oh, god. I really miss it. I got to get to the same competitive level that I used to be at."' Preparing to return to back to AAA Hockey that next school year, Montoya got the chance of a lifetime. At a USA Hockey Festival that summer, he played well enough to catch the attention of the Texas Torna- do of the United States Hockey League. Shortly after he began his sophomore season at Loyola, the Tornado offered him a chance to move to Fort Worth to become the youngest player in junior hockey. When he told his mom of the opportunity in Texas, she was in shock. However, after meeting the host fam- ily that Al would be living with, his mom got over it. "She knew that's what I wanted to do," Montoya said. "She's didn't want to stop anything. She wanted to support me 110 percent." Current Michigan sophomore defenseman Nick Martens lived with that same host family the year before and played with Al that season. While Montoya only played in 16 games, Martens and the others took him in as one of their own. "I was sort of like the little brother to all the guys," Montoya said. "I got lucky, they took me under. The coach treated me with the same respect as the other guys. But I think if it was not for that one team I went to, it could have been trouble." As Montoya was adjusting to life on his own, on the ice he was making his mark, and still does, is in practice. "In practice, he was the most competitive kid I have ever seen out there as a goalie," Martens said. "I think that early year away really helped him grow up. Even though now he's still a young kid, he's a lot more mature" After the season, Montoya was invited to come to Ann Arbor to join the U. S. National Team Develop- ment Program's Under-17 Team. Playing again in the USHL against older kids, Montoya had a 3.23 goals against average and a .912 save percentage, but his real accomplishments were at the World Challenge Championship in Manitoba this past January. Playing against some of the best Under-17 players in the 4 17-year-old Al Montoya is about to become the fifth straight Michigan goalie to start as a freshman. But for someone who's always played with older players, this is just... THE NEXT STOP. By Bob Hunt. Daily Sports Writer world, Montoya won three games for Team USA to get them to the championship game. In the title game against a Canadian Pacific All-Star team, Montoya entered the game with eight minutes remaining and the Americans down by one. Team USA then went on to win the game in overtime. "It was the most amazing feeling that you can get when you're in front of 7,000 fans and you score in overtime," Montoya said. "You expect to hear fans and all you hear is dead silence in Canada." Montoya was originally interested in Notre Dame,. Boston College and Wisconsin along with Michigan. But in December of last year, he learned he could likely become the Wolverines' starting goaltender this year. The opportunity was too good to pass up. Because he was only a high school junior, he made his decision without ever officially visiting another school. However, there was a slight problem. In order to be on campus this fall, Al had to take enough classes to graduate from high school a year early. Therefore he took five courses through the mail in addition to tak- ing seven classes at Ann Arbor Huron High. For those classes, Montoya was sent all the books to read and papers to write. Then after sending those in, he was sent the final. He accomplished all that school while playing on a team that travels to places such as Pitts- burgh, Texas and Slovakia. "It takes a lot of time management," Montoya said After all that, Montoya seems ready to take the CCHA by storm. While he is the youngest player on the team - senior captain Jed Ortmeyer is six years, five months and 10 days older than he is - his desire for competition can help him rise to the challenge. "I like the way Al plays," Michigan goalkeeping coach Stan Matwijw said. "He's really competitive and he really battles. He reminds me a lot like a cross between a Steve Shields and a Josh Blackburn. The way that he presents himself on the ice he resembles Steve Shields. But the way that he battles really resem- bles Josh Blackburn." In fact, sometimes he can almost be too competi- tive. Unlike most goalies, Montoya has been know to get into scuffles with players on other teams if he feels they have been taking advantage of his teammates. Last February he was suspended for a game for get- ting into a fight. "He's a good team guy. He loved his teammates," said Moe Mantha, his US-NTDP coach last season. "When he sees someone being taken advantage of, he'll help out. His competitiveness wears off on other people. He doesn't even have to say anything. He leads by example." While everyone raves about his competitiveness and his athleticism, he has real poise in net and his puck handling skills almost make him a third defenseman behind the goalline. "When I saw him last year, you always kept hearing 'athletic, athletic, big athlete," Michigan assistant coach Billy Powers said. "He's a good positional goal- tender, and doesn't always just rely on the fact that he's got great reflexes and that he's got a really nice glove. He's very calm and posed in the net, where I thought he may be a little jumpy. He looks sharp." One thing that Montoya says helped him adjust to the play at Michigan was when he was one of only four players his age to be invited to an under-20 World Junior Camp this past summer with players looking to play in the World Junior Championships this Decem- ber. Dwight Helminen, Eric Nystrom, Mike Komis- arek and Mike Cammellari played in that same tournament last year. For now, Montoya is just getting ready to take the next step. And considering how's he hung with an older crowd before, this should just be the next stop on the journey ofAl Montoya.